Showing posts with label hitchcock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hitchcock. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

JAMES D'ARCY PLAYS “PSYCHO” LEGEND ANTHONY PERKINS IN “HITCHCOCK”

British actor James D’Arcy, 37, looks uncannily like Anthony Perkins. In Fox Searchlight's shocking biopic “Hitchcock,” he sounds uncannily like him too. 
Photo courtesy of Fox Searchlight

             Director Sacha Gervasi always suspected casting Anthony Perkins, the famously rangy, boyish actor who became indelibly associated with Norman Bates in Alfred Hitchcock's “Psycho” – would be challenging. Then, out of the blue, James D’Arcy called him up. “D’Arcy is a friend of mine for years and I’d forgotten that, physically, he could be perfect for Perkins. He said, ‘you’re doing this Hitchcock thing, what about me?’ He came in and gave the most mind-blowing audition,” recalls Gervasi.

             D’Arcy, whose recent films include “W.E.” and “Cloud Atlas” says that for Perkins, “Psycho” was a kind of gift he’d been waiting for his whole career. “I think it was a huge break for Anthony Perkins,” he observes. “Actors were lining up to work with Hitchcock at this point. At the same time, the studios were trying to position Perkins as a kind of young James Dean which he didn’t fit into terribly easily. He was more gangly and gawky and kind of childlike and he didn’t have that sort of masculinity that Montgomery Clift or Brando and all those guys had and actually, I think ultimately, that was sort of the reason that we only really know him for `Psycho' -- because he was never truly accepted by American audiences beyond `Psycho.'”

             Q: You do have a remarkable physical resemblance to Anthony Perkins. The film’s producers recalled that as soon as you walked in, they said, "Holy crap, let’s hope he can act”.
             James D'Arcy: Did they? That's funny. Sacha said, "Let's read a little bit”. I had the first two lines of the scene and Hopkins fell off his chair laughing. Thank God it wasn’t in a "that's the worst acting I've ever seen in my life" kind of way. [Launches into a Hopkins impersonation.] "This is ridiculous. It's uncanny. Uncanny." So we start again and the same thing happens again, he falls off his chair, laughing. We did the scene and then we improvised for 10 minutes. I just thought, “If I get the job, great. If I don't get the job, I'm sitting in a room, improvising with Anthony Hopkins for 10 minutes. It's amazing”.

             Q: How was it for you to go back and study this role and film?
             D'Arcy: I think, to put it in the context of my film-watching career, I expect the nice guy to turn out to be a psychotic lunatic at the end. But nobody did in 1960, and that was what made “Psycho” so shocking. This was the first time anybody had done that. Now we're so expectant of that kind of thing, you can't even do it anymore.

             Q: What did you think of “Psycho” the first time you saw it?
             D'Arcy: I've only watched it one time. I've watched bits of it a lot. But I only watched the whole film once when I was 14. My friend forced me to watch it late at night. I was beyond terrified. I don't think I slept for the next four nights. So when this came around, at some point I thought, "Oh crap, I'm going to have to watch the film again”. So I watched it up to a point and then I went [mimes switching off the remote], ‘And then they all lived happily ever after’.”
             Q: It still affects you that much?
             D'Arcy: I couldn't bring myself to watch it! Maybe it isn't as terrifying as I remember it. The shower scene actually was not as bad as I remembered it. I just couldn't watch the end. I remember the bit where the mother spun around in the chair. I remember that was one of the most frightening things I'd ever seen.

             Q: So you didn’t know the ending before you saw it?
             D'Arcy: The word ‘psycho’ was in common parlance by the time I watched it, so I guess I knew that there was going to be a psychopathic lunatic on the loose somewhere. But the dead mother in the basement was a complete shock. That's what kept me up. So I didn't watch that scene again. But funnily enough, we sort of almost recreated that scene when we were doing this film. There was the dummy of the mother and I was standing there in the dress and the wig. It was a bit weird having a dress-fitting done. That's a first. But you know, it was fun. The wig was really scratchy.

             Q: And you/Anthony Perkins are not part of the shower scene.
             D'Arcy: We’re not. That's one of the little tidbits. Tony Perkins was in New York doing a play while they were filming the shower scene.

             Q: Was it intimidating working with iconic Oscar-winners Hopkins and Mirren, or do you quickly get past that?
             D'Arcy: Anthony Hopkins is covered in prosthetics, so he doesn't even look like himself. But you know, I had a really great time with him when I first met him and that never really went away. Helen's really fantastic and approachable.

             Q: Why do you think people are still so interested in Alfred Hitchcock?
             D'Arcy: I think there is an enduring fascination with Hitchcock for people who love cinema, and even for people who don't love cinema. He has framed so much of what filmmakers do, what they believe instinctively and, in fact, it's because we're conditioned through his films. 

             Q: Do you approach playing a real person differently than playing a fictional character?
             D'Arcy: I've done it before [in “W.E.”] and I think the trick is you have to make it your own. Look at Helen Mirren, as Queen Elizabeth, playing someone who's still alive. And whilst you are very clear in your mind that it's the queen, you quite quickly feel that you aren't watching exactly the queen, but a dramatization of her. And so it is here. I feel like Michael Sheen's been a huge proponent of playing people who are real, and has sort of blazed a nice trail of how you can do it and it feels authentic and it's not disrespectful. Yet you don't actually have to do an impression. That would be ridiculous.

             “Hitchcock” is shown exclusively at Ayala Malls Cinemas nationwide. Moviegoers can catch the film at Glorietta 4, Greenbelt 3, Trinoma, Alabang Town Center, Market! Market!, Ayala Center Cebu, Marquee (Central Luzon), Abreeza (Davao), Harbor Point (Subic) and Centrio (Cagayan de Oro). Hitchcock is released and distributed by Fox Searchlight.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

ANTHONY HOPKINS CUTS A TOWERING FIGURE AS “HITCHCOCK”

To play perhaps the most instantly recognizable filmmaker of all time, the team behind Fox Searchlight's shocking drama “Hitchcock” thought there was no one better for the job than Academy Award winner Anthony Hopkins. 
Photo courtesy of Fox Searchlight

             Hopkins is perhaps best known for his own unforgettably dark turn as a manipulative psychopath, Hannibal Lecter, who helped in the capture of a sophisticated, modern-day relation to Norman Bates, Buffalo Bill, in “The Silence of the Lambs.” But his prolific roster of roles -- from “The Elephant Man” and “Remains of the Day” to “Nixon” and “Shadowlands” -- reveals a broad versatility to embody the most complex personalities. 

             “I've always been fascinated by Hitchcock,” said Hopkins. “My first professional job was in the theatre in 1960 in Manchester and I remember going to the movies and `Psycho' was playing in Manchester. I went to see the movie on a Sunday night in October 1960 and I don't think I've ever been so scared in my life. It was maybe the greatest movie I've seen up to that point in my life. `Rear Window' and `Psycho' are my two favorite movies.”

             “Hitchcock” is the true-story behind the difficult production of the famed director's classic thriller “Psycho”, which brings insight to Hitchcock's fascination with the real-life serial killer who served as the inspiration for Norman Bates.

             Director Sacha Gervasi notes that he wasn’t looking at all for some kind of uncanny physical resemblance to Hitchcock, but rather, for someone who could bring forth something more subtle and vital: the humanity running beneath his well-known genius, quirks and cutting humor.

             “We didn’t want someone to just impersonate Hitchcock, that was important from the beginning,” Gervasi explains. “It was really about revealing the spirit of the man and Anthony Hopkins is a master of doing that with iconic characters, from Richard Nixon to Pablo Picasso to CS Lewis. When you see him as Hitchcock, it takes a moment to adjust to it, but his power as an actor is so deep that, within a few sentences, you become completely embedded in Tony Hopkins’ version of Hitchcock. There are very few actors in the world capable of doing that. He was really the only actor who I felt could pull it off. In fact, I told the producers that if we couldn’t get him we shouldn’t bother making the movie at all.” 

             Hopkins agrees that his performance exists on a razor-thin line, one that had to balance the idea of illuminating Hitchcock without doubling him. “I wouldn’t say ‘I become Hitchcock’. I don’t do that, because I’d go mad,” Hopkins muses. “You can’t become anyone, but you just try to find a way to balance it so as to not make a caricature. I felt Sacha had unlocked the story that no one else had previously done.” 

             Hopkins says his preparation for the role goes way back to 1960 when he himself first saw “Psycho” as a young actor in England and became a Hitchcock fan for life. He continued following his films, and even met Hitchcock briefly, but it was reading the “Hitchcock” script that brought him deeper into the man. “The script gave me a lot of the information that I needed,” he notes, “and then I watched several documentaries and films on Hitchcock and began putting together all the pieces.”

             Those pieces added up to a man who Hopkins says is an utter paradox. “He can be dark, troubled, cold, ruthless and obsessive and also big-hearted, warm and ingenious,” notes Hopkins. “That was all part of his nature.”
         “Hitchcock” is exclusive at Ayala Malls Cinemas nationwide. Moviegoers can catch the film at Glorietta 4, Greenbelt 3, Trinoma, Alabang Town Center, Market! Market!, Ayala Center Cebu, Marquee (Central Luzon), Abreeza (Davao), Harbor Point (Subic) and Centrio (Cagayan de Oro).